Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Prayer as Warfare: The 29th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Usually we think of men of prayer and men of war
as complete opposites.A monk in a
habit—such as St. Francis—is a man dedicated to peace, a total contrast to one
clad in armor brandishing weapons.Yet
the Readings for this Sunday combine the imagery of war and prayer in
interesting ways that provoke our thoughts about the nature and reality of
supplicating God.

In those days, Amalek came and waged war against Israel.
Moses, therefore, said to Joshua,
"Pick out certain men,
and tomorrow go out and engage Amalek in battle.
I will be standing on top of the hill
with the staff of God in my hand."
So Joshua did as Moses told him:
he engaged Amalek in battle
after Moses had climbed to the top of the hill with Aaron and Hur.
As long as Moses kept his hands raised up,
Israel had the better of the fight,
but when he let his hands rest,
Amalek had the better of the fight.
Moses’ hands, however, grew tired;
so they put a rock in place for him to sit on.
Meanwhile Aaron and Hur supported his hands,
one on one side and one on the other,
so that his hands remained steady till sunset.
And Joshua mowed down Amalek and his people
with the edge of the sword.

We should recall the context here.After the Ten Plagues and the Passover,
Israel has left Egypt a few weeks ago, crossed the Red Sea, and now entered
into the Sinai Peninsula: a vast, rocky, mountainous desert.Amalek was a nation of nomads that controlled
the northeastern part of the Sinai Peninsula and the southern part of the Negeb
(the south Judean desert).The Amalekites were not happy to have the Israelites moving through the outskirts of the their
territory, and they sent bands of scouts to trail them.According to Deut 25:18, the Amalekite
raiders killed off the weakest of the Israelites who lagged behind the main
camp—the ill, the elderly, poor families with many children, etc.The Amalekites were an ancient expression of
the culture of death.

Now on their way to Mount Sinai, in Exodus 17 the Israelites
are attacked outright by the bulk of the Amalekite forces, and they are forced
to respond, despite the fact that they are not military men but former slaves,
and have few if any proper weapons.It
is a situation of great peril that could end with the complete annihilation of
the Israelite people in the middle of a desert wasteland.

The young man Joshua goes out to lead those
forces the Israelites could muster, while Moses goes to the mountaintop to
beseech God in prayer.The moral sense
of this text is a good example of the complementarity of prayer and action, of ora et labora.The people fight and pray: both are
necessary, for the same reason that faith and works operate together.

How curious that Moses’ prayers are
necessary!Why doesn’t God just send
victory without them?Surely he
could!Yet this is the mystery of God’s
will: that he chooses to incorporate our participation in the fulfillment of
his plans (See Aquinas, Summa 2, 2, Q. 83, art. 2).He ordains to grant victory to Israel through Moses’ intercession.Prayer is a cooperation with God’s will for
us.

In the Old Testament, there were no “secular”
wars.Every battle was both a physical
and spiritual conflict, because the opposing armies always called on their
respective gods.The conflict of nations
was the conflict of their divinities, and the stronger divinities won.So in Exodus 17 as well: there is a spiritual battle
going on here between the LORD God of Israel and the gods of the Amalakites,
just as earlier in Exodus the LORD took on the gods of Egypt through the ten
plagues, defeating the Nile god, the crop god, the livestock gods, the sun god,
etc.In this spiritual conflict, prayer
is vital—God chooses to use it as his means to victory.This calls to mind later spiritual conflicts
in the ministry of Jesus, when the disciples cannot defeat and demon and the
Lord tells them: “This kind comes out only by prayer.”

As a Church, we find ourselves very much in the
position of the Israelites on their way to Sinai.We have left Egypt (=slavery to sin by
crossing through the sea (=Baptism), but now that we are free people we find we
have a fight on our hands.

People are surprised sometimes to discover that
the Christian life is a battle.They
supposed, perhaps, that things would be easier after baptism, or after
conversion.But you see, slaves don’t
have to fight.In Egypt, the Israelites
weren’t in the army—they just slaved away in obedience to their Egyptian
masters.That’s like the life of sin:
its not really a struggle.You don’t
fight temptation, you just obey it.It’s
not slaves, but free men who have to fight, who have to serve in the army.So it is in the spiritual life.When we leave our addictions behind, having
experienced conversion, we enter this life of freedom, but discover that
freedom entails struggle, that freedom cannot be maintained without fighting.

What gives us the power for this fight?Prayer.That’s the true source of our victory.But it must be persevering prayer that continues until the final victory
is won.

Benedict XVI points out that Moses, with both
arms lifted up in prayer, strikes a pose on the mountaintop much like Christ on
the cross.So we can see Moses here as a
type of Christ, prefiguring the great prayer to the Father that was the Passion
and Crucifixion, the great prayer which defeated the Enemy of God’s people
definitively.We participate in that
great Prayer of Christ on the cross at every Mass.

2.The Responsorial
Psalm is Ps 121:1-2, 3-4, 5-6, 7-8:

R. (cf. 2) Our
help is from the Lord, who made heaven and earth.I lift up
my eyes toward the mountains;
whence shall help come to me?
My help is from the LORD,
who made heaven and earth.R. Our help is from the Lord, who made
heaven and earth.May he not suffer your foot to slip;
may he slumber not who guards you:
indeed he neither slumbers nor sleeps,
the guardian of Israel.R. Our help is from the Lord, who made
heaven and earth.The LORD is your guardian; the LORD is your shade;
he is beside you at your right hand.
The sun shall not harm you by day,
nor the moon by night.R. Our help is from the Lord, who made
heaven and earth.The LORD will guard you from all evil;
he will guard your life.
The LORD will guard your coming and your going,
both now and forever.R. Our help is from the Lord, who made
heaven and earth.

Appropriately, the Lectionary follows the
account of the life-or-death spiritual battle against Amalek with a spiritual
warfare psalm, an ancient prayer that the people of Israel once took on their
lips to invoke the protection of their God, the LORD, against the curses and
evils of a violent pagan world.We
should notice the line “the sun shall not harm you by day, nor the moon by
night.”Is this a prayer against
sunburn?But then what about the
moon?No one gets "moonburn."Who is ever harmed by the moon?

In order to understand this psalm, we must
remember that the sun and moon were considered gods by almost all the
surrounding pagan peoples, who would curse the Israelites in the name of their
gods.So Psalm 121 is reassuring Israel
that the LORD will protect them against the malevolence of the sun god and moon
god.He can do this because he “made the
heavens and the earth”, including the sun and the moon, which are not gods, but
just heavenly bodies.Nonetheless, there
are malevolent spiritual powers out there, demons that threaten us with harm,
but we can be assured: “The LORD will guard you from all evil, he will guard
your life.”

Let’s remember that Psalm 121 is a prayer.The protection of the LORD is not
“automatic”—he ordains that we have a role to play.We need to take up this prayer on our lips,
to create an “opening” for him to work, to send his protecting power into our
lives.

3.Our
Second Reading is 2 Timothy 3:14-4:2:

Beloved:
Remain faithful to what you have learned and believed,
because you know from whom you learned it,
and that from infancy you have known the sacred Scriptures,
which are capable of giving you wisdom for salvation
through faith in Christ Jesus.
All Scripture is inspired by God
and is useful for teaching, for refutation, for correction,
and for training in righteousness,
so that one who belongs to God may be competent,
equipped for every good work.

I charge you in the presence of God and of Christ Jesus,
who will judge the living and the dead,
and by his appearing and his kingly power:
proclaim the word;
be persistent whether it is convenient or inconvenient;
convince, reprimand, encourage through all patience and teaching.

The Second Reading
breaks into two paragraphs: (1) meditation on the word, and (2) proclamation of
the word.

Timothy was St.
Paul’s appointed assistant, one on whom St. Paul had laid hands—that is,
ordained.So Timothy is a type of the
priest or bishop: one in holy orders who has the care of a local community of
God’s people.Therefore the instructions
of St. Paul to Timothy are most applicable to men in orders.The good priest must (1) meditate on the word
and (2) proclaim it consistently.

Second Timothy 3:16:
“All Scripture is inspired by God and is
useful for teaching, for refutation, for correction, and for training in
righteousness, “ is the closest thing to a proof-text for the doctrine of
Sola Scriptura that Protestants are able to find.However, this verse falls far short of saying
that Scripture alone is sufficient for all the needs of the Church, apart from
tradition and a teaching office.Some
Protestant apologists try to make the verse say more than it does by
translating the Greek word ophelimos
as “sufficient.”But ophelimos does not mean “sufficient,” it
means “useful” or “beneficial.”The
great irony of the Protestant slogan “sola Scriptura” is that the Bible itself
nowhere teaches that Scripture alone is all we need for the Christian life and
faith.To the contrary, see 2 Thess.
2:15.

Be that as it may,
as Catholics we could always do a better job of meditation on Scripture,
especially among the clergy.And to do
so requires us not necessarily to add more things to our schedule, but just to
pay more attention to the rhythm of prayer handed to us in the Church’s
liturgy.There is plenty of Scripture in
the Liturgy of the Hours and the Lectionary.Let’s be more attentive when we read it or hear it proclaimed.Periodically, we should practice lectio continua reading of
Scripture—entire books or sections straight through, perhaps while on a yearly
retreat.Lectio continua helps provide context to the excerpts of Scripture
read in the liturgy, and exposes us to Scriptures that are not included in any
cycle of readings.

The good priest
meditate on Scripture, but also proclaim Scripture.St Paul lays great emphasis on this, and by
speaking of “being persistent whether
convenient or inconvenient … reprimand … with all patience …”, St. Paul clearly indicates
that there will be opposition to the word: at times the word will be
“inconvenient” to the congregation, people will have to be “reprimanded,” and
to keep going in the face of this friction will require “patience.”Thus it was true in the first generation of
the Church and continues to be true today.It takes courage to preach, but those who take orders have no
choice—they are royal servants of the one who is going to appear “in kingly
power.”

Although this
second reading lays emphasis on Scripture and not so much in prayer, we can
discern the common theme of persistence that runs throughout the reads: Moses’
persistence in prayer, Timothy’s persistence in preaching, the woman’s
persistence in demanding justice.

Jesus told his disciples a parable
about the necessity for them to pray always without becoming weary.
He said, "There was a judge in a certain town
who neither feared God nor respected any human being.
And a widow in that town used to come to him and say,
'Render a just decision for me against my adversary.'
For a long time the judge was unwilling, but eventually he thought,
'While it is true that I neither fear God nor respect any human being,
because this widow keeps bothering me
I shall deliver a just decision for her
lest she finally come and strike me.'"
The Lord said, "Pay attention to what the dishonest judge says.
Will not God then secure the rights of his chosen ones
who call out to him day and night?
Will he be slow to answer them?
I tell you, he will see to it that justice is done for them speedily.
But when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth?"

We are nearing the end of Luke’s “Travel
Narrative”, and in two weeks Jesus will be in Jericho, the eastern gateway to
Judea, just a day’s walk from Jerusalem.As he nears the end of the journey, he teaches on prayer.Prayer will be so important in the dramatic
events about to transpire in Passion Week:Jesus will pray all night in Gethsemane, and urge his Apostles to do the
same.

As is his custom, Jesus uses an earthy,
every-day-life example to teach spiritual lessons.Israelites were well-familiar with government
corruption and local officials who looked out only for themselves.They could probably think of examples of
civic judges, appointed by the Romans or some other authority, who had cared
nothing for the widows, orphans, poor, and sick in their cities.Yet this persistent widow prevails over the
unjust judge in Jesus parable.The judge
concedes, lest “she finally come and strike me.”This last line is probably a mistranslation:
the Greek verb rendered “strike me” is better translated “wear me out.”The judge is not worried about the old woman
coming and hitting him with her cane, but just in become exhausted by her
constant asking.

The message is simple: if evil authorities
concede to persistence, how much more a loving Father!So let us not give up persevering in
prayer.

St. Luke tells us that Jesus told this so that
his disciples would “pray always.”The
Church takes seriously this command to pray always, and different devotional
practices have arisen to carry it out.The Liturgy of the Hours or Divine Office is the primary way the Church
expresses her desire to “pray always,” by marking the passing of time through
the day with prayer—explicit, communal, and vocal where possible.

Spanish Leftists "Execute" Jesus c. 1936

It’s not possible for all lay people to pray the
Liturgy of the Hours, however.St.
Josemaria, who dedicated a great deal of time pondering how the laity should
pray, devised a schedule of prayer for the Catholic layperson (here).He also encouraged us to “turn our work into
prayer,” by working well, with an intention of offering our work to God for a
specific intention.Speaking to
students, he said, “An hour of study, for a modern apostle, is an hour of
prayer,” and mutatis mutandis the
same is true for those in other vocations.St. Josemaria recommended the praying of brief aspirations all through
the day, little acts of love or faith, like “My Jesus, I trust in you!” or
“Mary Queen of Angels, pray for me!”This is not a substitute for dedicating a quiet time of the day
specifically for mental prayer (or meditation—that is, free-form interior
conversation with God)—fifteen minutes to half an hour for most lay
people.But when all these forms of
prayer are used together: aspirations, offering our labor, particular times of
meditation, plus communal or familial recitation of vocal prayers (rosary,
chaplets, etc.), we strive to be like Moses, with our hands always uplifted in
prayer.How necessary in a time when
spiritual warfare is getting ever more severe!

10 comments:

Nick
said...

Regarding Israelite warfare: I forget the scriptural verse, but God chastises one of the Israelite kings for not completely destroying an enemy nation of Isreal, because God was using Israel to punish the nation for its sins. I've always thought of it when people say God is evil for killing nations in the Old Testament, and reflect on how people react to the evil nations of today: on one hand, saying they deserve destruction; on the other hand, saying God is evil for allowing those nations to exist.

@Nick: I'm sorry, but I have a problem with that perspective. Few people I know have a problem with the Israelites "mowing down" the armies of their enemies, but it's the killing of "every last man, woman and child" that most people have trouble with. And, even today, few people believe we should have eliminated EVERY CITIZEN of Nazi Germany, every child in Imperialist Japan, every woman and child of Iraq, for example, or North Korea, etc. I'm not saying the Israelites were wrong for "following God's instructions", but I am saying I still do not understand it.

Please consider a spiritual lens to look at these warring passages. The war that we are called to is one against sin. There is a spiritual lesson here. Fight against sin until it is completed dead, rooted out of our lives. Let us fight well, Christians!

Please see Fr. Robert Barron's comments:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p-Fmmm00LHs

There are times in the gospels when Christ alters a command that had previously been given. The example that sticks out the most to me is the one regarding divorce. He says it was provided because of the ‘hardness of your hearts’. There is some sense, it seems at least, that the allowance of divorce incorporated within itself an element of something ‘not fully right’. However, in Christ, that previous command (permission) is now revoked, but revoked because something has actually changed (the Cross and Resurrection and the inauguration of the new era). I wonder if the warfare in the Old Testament can flow through a similar alteration, in the way that Benedict mentions with the Moses/Christ parallel. I suppose what I’m wondering is this: that the OT warfare does not need to be read as “all light”, in a similar way that the divorce provision is not “all light”. And that, in Christ, we actually live in new era (an “already but not yet” era). This makes a great deal of sense (to me at least). It doesn’t allow us to ‘spiritualize’ the old testament, but says that its alteration is based on something that actually happened (ie, Christ, and the inauguration of a new era). I wonder if part of our difficulty is an attempt to read the Old Testament ‘straight’ (or, to justify it, or to spiritualize it), and ignore the meteoric impact of Christ, the one who ‘turned the ages’ and who claimed to have the authority to do so. I guess if it is true that now we live in a time of ‘prayerful violence’, rather than militaristic, then that is because we are not actually living in the same ‘time’ as the Old Testament (not, for example, because we are more enlightened).

I'm going to take issue with the very idea that the dooms of certain groups were simply in the Old Testament. The worst (and last) doom quantitatively was in 70 AD and was announced by Christ who said it would include preborns within the women of Jerusalem (Luke 19:44) and He said it would happen because Jerusalem did not know the time of its visitation (ibid). Josephus gives a figure of 1.1 million killed in that Jerusalem doom and Tacitus gives 600,000. There is no God guided doom after that in the "certainly willed" sense that we can know of since Revelation closed. The Romans did the slaughter of Jerusalem but God willed it and Christ gave its real reason in the mentioned Lucan verse. Exodus 20:5 says that God punishes down to the third and fourth generation physically not as to guilt of sin...hence the preborns. Fr. Barron in his video and Pope Benedict in section 42 of Verbum Domini both shrink from mentioning the 70 AD doom announced by Christ; and neither seems to know Wisdom chapter 12 ( only canonical with Catholics) which tells you that God first punished the Canaanites slowly and lightly to give them space for repentance ( Wis.12:10) for four hundred years until their sin was complete or filled up in God's eyes ( Gen.15:16) before He resorted to the dooms. Jerusalem is also not doomed until its sins are fiiled up or complete ( Matthew 23:32). The dooms by God were God's last resort with people...not His first measure. The answer is that God is taking humans into the next world everyday of the week...including women and children (c.150,000 per day). Read your newspaper. Fifty one people in a bus in Peru went over the edge of a cliff just days ago and were all killed hundreds of feet below. That can only happen if God permits it and He permits such things weekly. Christ said that a bird does not fall to the ground without your Father's permission. Did God bring the Peru incident about by actively choosing it rather than permitting it? We have no idea because Scripture no longer tells us when God wills such things actively as He did the dooms. In scripture both God and the devil bring deaths to humans. God killed Herod in Acts 12 and the devil used a storm to kill Job's relatives (Job1:19) and used men to slay Job's servants ( Job1:15). So both God and the devil can be the active source of a death but only God permits both deaths...and we cannot know outside scripture usually whether God or the devil actively willed a death. The Biblical dooms had several purposes: punishment of the Canaanites but only after four hundred years of lighter punishments; protection of the Jews from the corruptive Canaanite culture of child sacrifice and cannibalism ( Wisdom 12:5)...which the Jews repeatedly followed anyway later. The Jews did not have sanctifying grace though they had sporadic actual grace. Hence they were weak. Christ brings sanctifying grace in John 1:17 and He reduces the power of satan in Luke 10:18. But Jews were spiritually weaker than we imagine prior to Christ...except for a few like Job and John the Baptist etc.

The death of innocent people is undeniable and has happened on a large scale throughout history. How can God allow it? We don't have a final answer now, but the Cross sheds enough light. The Cross shows that (1) God himself experienced a painful, innocent death, (2) God the Father experienced the death of an innocent child, (3) God can overcome death through the resurrection. Although in any particular case we cannot say why God permits or even actively wills death, the Cross demonstrates that God knows intimately the suffering that we undergo, and in his love did not shrink from sharing it himself, and overcoming it by his power. This gives us confidence that God would not permit/will death without a reason rooted in his love, because he has shown his love for us in the most radical way possible. I put my trust in the God who suffered the Cross, and will await further understanding in the next life.